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University of Hawai鈥榠 dean sues law professor who criticized diversity event

The twist: The criticisms, from Professor Kenneth Lawson, Co-Director of the Hawai'i Innocence Project, were made 2 years ago. Why the lawsuit now? Could it be because Lawson went public last month with claims UH doctored his course materials?
University of Hawaii at Manoa is the flagship campus of University of Hawaii

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When the University of Hawai鈥榠 at Manoa planned a Black History Month event in February 2023 that lacked any black facilitators, law professor Kenneth Lawson publicly challenged a dean about it at a faculty meeting. Nearly two years later, and shortly after clashing with administrators over their decision to doctor one of his class presentations,  Lawson suddenly must defend himself against a defamation lawsuit over his remarks 鈥 one filed by that same dean. 

On Feb. 20, Lawson鈥檚 legal team filed an anti-SLAPP motion to dismiss the dean鈥檚 lawsuit, in which she alleged that Lawson鈥檚 heated arguments with her concerning the Black History Month event, as well as Lawson鈥檚 call to boycott the event, were defamatory. Lawson鈥檚 legal team argues that the defamation suit is 鈥渁n attempt to chill and silence Professor Lawson鈥檚 constitutionally protected speech.鈥 And the fact that it came fast on the heels of a curriculum dispute raises further questions of retaliation.

2023: Lawson files First Amendment lawsuit against university following imbroglio over Black History Month event 

The threats to Lawson鈥檚 expressive freedoms date to a faculty meeting back in February 2023, where he voiced vehement objections to a scheduled Black History Month event that was to feature a panel with no black facilitators. (Lawson is black.) 

At the meeting, UH Dean Camille Nelson clashed with Lawson over the issue. Lawson claimed Nelson (who is also black) didn鈥檛 have sufficient experience in or understanding of the Civil Rights Movement. Nelson retorted that her experience as a black woman gave her perspective to understand racism, but that she did not want to litigate that issue during the meeting. In a follow-up email, Lawson accused Nelson of being 鈥渉ighly dismissive鈥 of his objections, and a few days later, he called for a boycott of the panel via a university listserv. 

Law professor Ken Lawson with the entrance sign for the University of Hawai'i at Manoa in the background

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UH banned Lawson from campus and launched an investigation to determine whether he had created a 鈥渉ostile work environment鈥 for his colleagues. The university also issued no-contact orders barring Lawson from contacting certain administrators and restricting his use of university listservs. 

Lawson, in turn, sued UH for violating his First Amendment rights to speak on a matter of public concern: racism and inclusion at the university. 

The university eventually sanctioned Lawson for the February 2023 incident, requiring him to complete mandatory training and serve a one-month suspension without pay. Lawson returned to teaching in August of 2024, after completing the university鈥檚 sanctions under protest as his legal case proceeded.

2025: Lawson becomes locked in conflict over academic freedom violations

Last month, we told readers about Lawson鈥檚 clash with the university over an in-class PowerPoint presentation. Last September, Lawson used a hypothetical involving himself and two deans 鈥 one of whom shoots at the other, misses, and hits Lawson accidentally 鈥 to teach his law students the legal concept of . The accompanying slide included website portraits of himself and the two deans to illustrate the example. 

Slide with an image of law professor Ken Lawson alongside two other administrators at the University of Hawaii

When an anonymous student filed a complaint about the example, the university鈥檚 response to the complaint presented a master class in how to violate academic freedom. The university ordered Lawson to change the hypothetical because it could be 鈥渄isturbing and harmful,鈥 despite the fact that he had not violated any policy. When Lawson rightfully demurred, the university unilaterally changed Lawson鈥檚 slides, removing images of the two deans鈥攂ut leaving Lawson as the victim of the shooting. (Why students would be less disturbed by a hypothetical that still depicted their professor as a shooting victim was not explained.)

Slide with an image of law professor Ken Lawson alongside generic man/woman icons

FIRE sent two letters to the university urging it to restore the hypothetical to its original state. We argued that unilaterally changing a faculty member鈥檚 teaching materials raised serious concerns about the university鈥檚 fealty to the basic tenets of academic freedom. Those tenets protect the right of faculty members to determine how best to teach their subjects. This freedom is even more important when those topics are complicated, difficult, or potentially upsetting to students. Going over Lawson鈥檚 head to change the hypothetical without his consent also raises serious concerns for future academic freedom issues. Would UH consistently bypass faculty rights to change instruction until the teaching satisfied administrators?

UH dean files defamation lawsuit

Shortly after Lawson filed his censorship grievance, and nearly two years after the case鈥檚 original filing, Nelson hit Lawson with a lawsuit of her own: She alleged that Lawson鈥檚 behavior at the meeting nearly two years earlier, and his subsequent email to the university listserv, had defamed her. 

She suffered significant emotional distress and reputational harm, she says, because of Lawson鈥檚 alleged accusations of her of being a silent 鈥淚ntellectual Negro.鈥&苍产蝉辫;

Yet defamation claims require proof that the targeted person made false statements of fact, not just heated statements of opinion. There is no way to read Lawson鈥檚 remarks as anything but opinion. Furthermore, the First Amendment offers a 鈥wide latitude鈥 for faculty members to express themselves 鈥on political issues in vigorous, argumentative, unmeasured, and even distinctly unpleasant terms.鈥&苍产蝉辫;

Statue of justice holding scales with red tape over her mouth

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SLAPP lawsuits 鈥 strategic lawsuits against public participation 鈥 are often used to silence expression by bringing legal claims about others鈥 speech. Lawson鈥檚 legal team filed his anti-SLAPP motion seeking the dean鈥檚 suit鈥檚 dismissal on Feb. 20. 

We hope this motion will give UH the sharp reminder it needs that faculty members have a right to speak on matters of public concern. Faculty members also have the right to determine how to approach their courses. And faculty members shouldn鈥檛 have to fear retaliation 鈥 in the university setting or in the court of law 鈥 for exercising their First Amendment rights.

We鈥檒l continue to keep readers apprised of Lawson鈥檚 battle against his university.

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